Joseph E. Persico (69 page)

Read Joseph E. Persico Online

Authors: Roosevelt's Secret War: FDR,World War II Espionage

Tags: #Nonfiction

BOOK: Joseph E. Persico
8.98Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Hang on until we get in”: ibid.

“If you speak publicly of it. . . .”: ibid.

“First, I told him. . . .”: Andrew, pp. 104, 107, 108.

“the product of a mind. . . .”: ibid., p. 108.

The Japanese had reason to believe: Ladislas Farago,
The Game of the Foxes,
p. 473.

“As communicated to me. . . .”: ibid., pp. 473–74.

“I have discovered that the United States. . . .”: Andrew, p. 109.

They continued to send: Farago, p. 474.

And because the Japanese: Doris Kearns Goodwin,
No Ordinary Time,
p. 265.

“There is more reason. . . .”: Andrew, p. 110.

After hurried consultations: ibid., p. 111.

The Prime Minister grabbed: F. W. Winterbotham,
The Ultra Secret,
p. 46; Jeffrey M. Dorwart,
Conflict of Duty,
p. 16.

The Germans calculated: Norman Polmar and Thomas B. Allen,
Spy Book,
pp. 192–93; David Kahn,
Seizing the Enigma,
p. 68.

The British quickly took the lead: Winterbotham, p. 31.

Among Turing's associates were: Polmar and Allen,
Spy Book,
p. 74.

Ultra was the designation: Winterbotham, p. 46.

Eventually, over a thousand: Polmar and Allen,
Spy Book,
p. 80.

So paramount was secrecy: ibid., p. 74.

Churchill demanded to see: Winterbotham, p. 189.

What doomed Coventry was: Nigel West,
A Thread of Deceit,
pp. 10–17; David Stafford,
Churchill and Secret Service,
pp. 194, 195; Christopher Andrew and David Dilks,
The Missing Dimension,
p. 149.

In exchange, their Bletchley counterparts: Andrew, p. 107.

“were not as security minded. . . .”: John Costello,
Days of Infamy,
p. 305.

“divulging to the President. . . .”: ibid.

“devise any safe means. . . .”: ibid.

Britain's eavesdropping on a friend: Andrew, p. 107.

chapter viii: donovan enters the game

“collect and analyze all information and data”: Norman Polmar and Thomas B. Allen,
Spy Book,
p. 135.

“to carry out when requested. . . .”: ibid., p. 135
n
189.

Ignoring civil service. . . .: Ray S. Cline,
Secrets, Spies and Scholars,
p. 42.

Conyers Read: Stanley Lovell,
Of Spies and Stratagems,
p. 183.

“It is a curious fact. . . .”: Cline, p. 41.

Gregg Toland: Ephraim Katz,
The Film Encyclopedia,
3d ed., 1998, pp. 435–36.

“All who knew him and worked. . . .”: Curt Gentry,
J. Edgar Hoover,
p. 135.

After only three weeks: Thomas F. Troy,
Donovan and the CIA,
p. 110.

The bureau initially earmarked: Nathan Miller,
Spying for America,
p. 243.

payroll of ninety-two employees: Polmar and Allen,
Spy Book,
p. 135.

Within months the staff: Anthony Cave Brown,
The Last Hero,
p. 174.

Most of his funds were: ibid.

His staff first occupied: Cline, p. 42.

It was equipped with air conditioning: ibid., p. 57.

“closely resembled a cat house. . . .”: Brown,
The Last Hero,
p. 174.

As
Life
magazine put it: Troy,
Donovan and the CIA,
p. 94.

He pressured the Bureau of the Budget: Brown,
The Last Hero,
pp. 175–77.

He was further preparing to conduct: PSF Box 128; Bradley F. Smith,
The Shadow Warriors,
p. 93.

“This seems to be a matter. . . .”: M 1642, Reel 22, Frame 425.

“making the American people ripe. . . .”: PSF Box 128.

“. . . [S]ince the appearances of articles in. . . .”: ibid.

“Roosevelt has named the Colonel. . . .”: Brown,
The Last Hero,
p. 166.

“Mr. Donovan is now head of the Gestapo. . . .”: ibid., p. 791.

When he took his complaints: Gentry, p. 135.

“I stopped him from becoming AG. . . .”: ibid., p. 148.

A full year before: Leslie B. Rout Jr. and John F. Bratzel,
The Shadow War,
p. 37.

Well before Donovan signed up: Gentry, p. 264.

Running this worldwide network: ibid.

“[H]e goes to the White House. . . .”: Brown,
The Last Hero,
p. 159.

“more of a spoiled child. . . .”: ibid.

The FBI still controlled: Phillip Knightley,
The Second Oldest Profession,
pp. 32–35.

The penetration was so complete: Robert Louis Benson and Michael Warner, eds.,
VENONA,
pp. 15–16.

These triumphs, which Hoover described: Charles Wighton and Gunter Peis,
Hitler's Spy and Saboteurs,
p. 17.

“[A] thing like that ought not be given. . . .”: Athan Theoharis, ed.,
From the Secret Files of J. Edgar Hoover,
p. 333.

“Anything that I said. . . .”: ibid., pp. 331–34.

Astor's conversations with the director: ibid., p. 330.

“most dangerous file clerk”:
NYT,
Sept. 15, 1991.

“Roosevelt's folly”: Miller, p. 244.

“There was no indication. . . .”: Adolf Berle Papers, Box 213, FDRL.

“into the entire motion picture industry. . . .”: ibid.

“what you ought to do. . . .”: Troy,
Donovan and the CIA,
p. 163.

“It appears that some question. . . .”: POF Box 4485.

“Wild Bill's face got red . . .”: Ernest B. Furgurson, “Back Channels,”
Washingtonian,
vol. 31 (June 1996).

chapter ix: “our objective is to get america into the war”

“The heat in Washington. . . .”: Doris Kearns Goodwin,
No Ordinary Time,
p. 262.

Washington mythology had it: David Brinkley,
Washington Goes to War,
p. 23.

“There was nothing. . . .”: Goodwin, p. 262.

“told me that he was going. . . .”: ibid.

Getting a man confined to a wheelchair: Gordon Prange,
December 7, 1941,
p. 16.

“As Mr. Roosevelt made his first turn. . . .”: Eric Larrabee,
Commander in Chief,
p. 32.

Steaming toward the
Augusta:
Goodwin, p. 264.

“To some of my very pointed questions. . . .”: Irwin F. Gellman,
Secret Affairs,
p. 257.

“reasonably longer distances. . . .”: PSF Box 59.

Elliott, the first Roosevelt son:
Current Biography
1946 (New York: Wilson 1947), p. 516.

His metal leg braces: William Doyle,
Inside the Oval Office,
p. 7.

As Churchill strode up the gangway: Suckley, Binder 20, p. 61.

Starling's impersonation was the first time: John Gunther,
Roosevelt in Retrospect,
p. 45; Grace Tully,
F.D.R., My Boss,
p. 247.

“We have all been laughing. . . .”: Suckley, Binder 20, p. 57c.

“magnificent presence in all his youth. . . .”: Warren F. Kimball,
The Juggler: Franklin Roosevelt as Wartime Statesman,
p. 355.

He subsequently held: Goodwin, p. 33.

He took to soldiering: John Charmley,
Churchill,
p. 141.

“I am so devoured by egoism”: ibid.

“I don't like standing near the edge. . . .”: Lord Moran,
Churchill: Taken from the Diaries of Lord Moran,
p. 179.

She was genteel, prudish: Suckley Papers, Wilderstein.

“He is a tremendously vital person. . . .”: Suckley, Binder 20, p. 61.

“. . . [A]ll that was romantic in [Churchill]. . . .”: David Stafford,
Churchill and Secret Service,
p. 6.

“free exchange of intelligence”: ibid., p. 200.

“Are we going to throw all our secrets . . .?”: ibid.

“I simply have not got enough Navy. . . .”: Goodwin, p. 265.

“the wrong war. . . .”: ibid.

Their first objective: Gellman, p. 258.

Roosevelt and Churchill had agreed: Frank Freidel,
Franklin D. Roosevelt,
p. 387.

These goals were to follow: Goodwin, p. 266.

Britain's sea losses: David Grubin Productions, “FDR,”
The American Experience,
PBS.

1“Our objective is to get the Americans. . . .”: Thomas F. Troy,
Wild Bill and Intrepid,
pp. 63, 229; Troy,
The Coordinator of Information and British Intelligence,
p. 88.

“was obviously determined to come in. . . .”: Freidel, p. 387.

Three weeks after the Atlantic conference: Gellman, p. 257.

The U-boat's captain: Jeffrey M. Dorwart,
The Office of Naval Intelligence,
p. 258.

The
Greer
then fired several depth charges: James MacGregor Burns,
Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom,
p. 139.

Since the U-boat had remained: Gellman, p. 259.

When her sister was stranded in Europe: Gunther, pp. 162–63.

The loss of his mother: Robert Thompson,
A Time for War,
p. 353.

Wearing a light gray seersucker suit: Burns, p. 140.

“The United States destroyer
Greer.
.
.
.
”: ibid.

“It is clear. . . .”: Gellman, p. 354.

He meant that American warships: Burns,
Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom,
p. 141.

“. . . [W]hen you see a rattlesnake poised. . . .”: ibid.

“to subvert the government . . .”: Christopher Andrew,
For the President's Eyes Only,
p. 102.

“Hitler will have to choose. . . .”: Thompson, p. 355.

“There is no longer any difference. . . .”: ibid.

Six weeks later, on October 27: Tully, p. 33.

On the dais, the President: Thompson, pp. 356–57.

The President seized on the incident: Nathan Miller,
Spying for America,
p. 246.

“We have wished to avoid shooting. . . .”: Burns,
Roosevelt: The Soldier of Freedom,
p. 147.

“Hitler has often protested. . . .”: Thompson, p. 357.

“a principal agent for Germany. . . .”: Leslie B. Rout Jr. and John F. Bratzel,
The Shadow War,
pp. 32–33.

An MI6 report: ibid., pp. 26–27.

The American military, at that point: Miller, p. 229.

“has on it certain manuscript notations. . . .”: Thompson, pp. 357–58.

Wheeler's suspicions: William Stevenson,
A Man Called Intrepid,
p. 299.

“Where did it originate?”: ibid., p. 298.

The map's provenance: Thompson, p. 359; Stevenson, p. 297.

Sandstede, however, was not murdered: Thompson, p. 358.

“Air Traffic Grid of the United States . . .”: ibid., pp. 358–59; Troy,
The Coordinator,
p. 149.

The letter from the Bolivian attaché: Andrew, p. 102.

“manufacturing documents detailing. . . .”: Thompson, p. 360.

The answer clearly lies: Goodwin, p. 282.

The truth was that since June 1941: F. H. Hinsley,
British Intelligence in the Second World War,
vol. 2, p. 174.

Further, Hitler had not: Thompson, p. 244.

On November 8, after a close House tally: Goodwin, p. 283.

That same month a Gallup poll: Gellman, p. 252.

“German
and
Russian militarism. . . .”: Bradley F. Smith,
The Shadow Warriors,
p. 87.

FDR's least recognized agent: Jeffrey M. Dorwart,
Conflict of Duty,
p. 168.

Within days, he delivered: Wayne S. Cole,
Charles A. Lindbergh and the Battle Against American Intervention in World War II,
p. 131.

Lindbergh, the President explained: ibid.

“about the whole problem. . . .”: Dorwart,
Conflict of Duty,
pp. 168–69.

“Conditions both within and without. . . .”:
The

Magic

Background of Pearl Harbor,
vol. 1,
February 14, 1941–May 12, 1941,
p. A-12.

“There are still Japanese. . . .”: PSF Box 84.

But American-born Japanese: ibid.

“Your reporter . . . is horrified. . . .”: ibid.

“[I]mmediate arrests may be required.”: PSF Box 97.

If negotiations between America: Hinsley, vol. 2, p. 76.

Within the War Department: Charles Higham,
American Swastika,
p. 135.

Officers who thought: FBI Report, Dec. 5, 1941.

“Aren't you afraid of delivering . . .?”: Higham, p. 140.

“a right to know. . . .”: ibid.

“Wedemeyer spent two years in Germany. . . .”: FBI Report, Dec. 5, 1941.

“the greatest mind. . . .”: Higham,
American Swastika,
p. 141.

FDR'S WAR PLANS!:
ibid.

“. . . President Roosevelt calls. . . .”: ibid., pp. 141–42.

“What would you think . . .?”: ibid., pp. 144–45.

chapter x: catastrophe or conspiracy

“Mr. President, it looks as if. . . .”: William Doyle,
Inside the Oval Office,
p. 35.

“My God, there's another wave. . . .”: ibid.

“His chin stuck out. . . .”: ibid.

“. . . [W]e received indications. . . .”: ibid., p. 36.

“. . . [T]hey were to agree to cease. . . .”: ibid.

“equalled only by the Japanese. . . .”: ibid.

“It looks as if out of eight. . . .”: ibid., p. 37.

“demonstrated that ultimate capacity. . . .”: ibid., p. 38.

Senator Tom Connally of Texas: ibid., p. 39.

“They will never be able. . . .”: Ronald H. Spector,
Eagle Against the Sun,
p. 93.

“. . . If there is anyone I. . . .”: Jeffrey M. Dorwart,
Conflict of Duty,
p. 172.

He had summoned the COI chief: Day-by-Day, Dec. 8, 1941.

“Colonel William Donovan, come. . . .”: Thomas F. Troy,
Donovan and the CIA,
p. 116.

Stacks of books: Doyle, p. 26; John Gunther,
Roosevelt in Retrospect,
p. 362.

Other books

Claimed by Her Demon by Lili Detlev
Return to Sender by Julie Cross
Times and Seasons by Beverly LaHaye
Rodeo Rocky by Jenny Oldfield
Finding A Way by T.E. Black
Into White by Randi Pink
Jennifer August by Knight of the Mist